Athlon’s preseason All-Big Ten team includes five Bruins, with UCLA represented by running back Wayne Knight, defensive lineman Sahir West, offensive lineman Eugene Brooks, linebacker Samy Omosigho and cornerback Rodrick Pleasant.
No Bruin landed on the first team, but Knight showed up twice on the list. He was selected as a second-team all-purpose player and also earned third-team honors as a specialist, a nod to the punt-return role he’s expected to handle.
Knight arrived in Westwood from Jame Madison, following new UCLA head coach Bob Chesney. Last season, he paced the Dukes on the ground with 1,373 rushing yards, good for 98.1 per game, and added 9 touchdowns while averaging 6.6 yards per carry.
He also chipped in 180 punt-return yards.
West was tabbed for the third-team defense after a strong season as a pass rusher. He, too, came over from JMU, where he was the Sun Belt Conference Freshman of the Year. In 2025, West finished seventh on the team with 45 total tackles and led the Dukes with 14.0 tackles for a loss and 7.0 sacks.
Brooks is one of only two Bruins on the preseason All-Big Ten team who played for UCLA last season. He’s also projected to be one of two offensive linemen who logged significant snaps for the Bruins a year ago. Brooks started all 11 games he played last season.
Omosigho, an Oklahoma transfer, was placed on the fourth-team defense and is expected to make an immediate impact. He ranked fifth among Sooner defenders last season with 50 total tackles and added 4.5 tackles for a loss and 2.0 sacks.
Pleasant rounds out UCLA’s selections after earning All-Big Ten honorable mention last season. He finished ninth on the team with 26 total tackles and also posted 7 pass breakups and 1.5 tackles for a loss.
In Other News...
UCLA Is Deep In The Fight For The Nations Top Recruit
The race for Kaleena Smith is only getting bigger, and UCLA has secured a spot in the middle of it. The top-ranked player in the 2027 class has lined up 11 official visits, with Westwood on the itinerary for Oct. 30, giving the Bruins a chance to make their case to one of the countrys most coveted young guards. Smith, a 5-foot-6 point guard, has built her reputation on scoring and vision, and her junior season numbers, 31.5 points and 6.9 assists per game, show why so many programs are pressing to get her on campus.
UCLA is not alone in the chase, with Smith also setting visits to schools such as Louisville, Cal, Syracuse, LSU and Notre Dame, along with a long list that stretches across the country. The Bruins have been in the mix for a while, having offered her in August 2025 and later bringing her to Westwood on an unofficial visit, but the upcoming official trip adds a different level of urgency. For UCLA, the timing matters, and so does the competition, because this recruitment already looks like one that could stretch deep into the cycle. [Read more 🡒]
UCLAs Biggest Backfield Question May Finally Have An Answer
UCLAs backfield picture has been one of the few stable parts of a season that quickly went off the rails, and now it has a new layer of intrigue with the coaching change. After the 0-3 start and DeShaun Fosters dismissal in his second year, the Bruins are turning the program over to Bob Chesney, who arrives with a strong rsum from James Madison, where he delivered a Sun Belt title and a College Football Playoff berth. Even before the staff fully resets, the running back room already offers a clearer path than a lot of the roster.
Knight looks like the back most likely to anchor the offense, coming off a breakout season that showed he can carry a heavy load while also adding value as a receiver. Behind him, the Bruins still have pieces with defined jobs, including Thomas as a passing-game option after struggling to get much going on the ground and Woods as a power-back candidate trying to rebound from a season-ending injury at Utah. For a team trying to steady itself, the question is no longer whether UCLA has enough bodies at the position, but how quickly the new staff settles on the right mix. [Read more 🡒]
